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étude

[ ey-tood, ey-tyood, ey-tood, ey-tyood; French ey-tyd ]

noun

, plural é·tudes [ey, -toodz, ey, -tyoodz, ey-, toodz, ey-, tyoodz, ey-, tyd].
  1. a musical composition, usually instrumental, intended mainly for the practice of some point of technique.


étude

/ ˈeɪtjuːd; etyd /

noun

  1. a short musical composition for a solo instrument, esp one designed as an exercise or exploiting technical virtuosity
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of étude1

From French, dating back to 1830–40; study
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Word History and Origins

Origin of étude1

C19: from French: study
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Example Sentences

A lovingly produced large box, with sheet music of each etude and a book of eclectic essays about the etudes, came out late last year.

So he returned to the stage and started the gentle undulations of the A-flat major étude he had played some 40 minutes earlier — now with even more flowing naturalness.

Or to watch the loving attention Namekawa gives to the technical challenge that each étude addresses, and to every little shift in Glass’s repetitions.

They even dared to parody South Korean girl group Blackpink for using a small part of a motif from Paganini's La Campanella étude in their song Shut Down.

From BBC

Particularly touching among those: “Wildwood Etude,” which sets the second movement from Del Tredici’s as-yet-unreleased song cycle “Gay Life.”

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et tu, Bruteetui